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#1
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In message , Barry Salter
writes On 13 Dec 2004 14:13:54 -0800, wrote: Because I'm that sort of person, this question has been bugging me for a while. Where is London's busiest level crossing in terms of off-peak weekday trains per hour? Where ever in London it is, is it the busiest level crossing in the UK? In Europe? Anywhere? A post on the UK Roads forum suggests Manor Road, Richmond, (adjacent to North Sheen station) as a possibility. If that is so (and I think it likely) then the level crossings at Sheen Lane (adjacent to Mortlake station), White Hart Lane and Vine Road are equal contenders since all four are on the same stretch of line. Having four level crossings in close succession on a line that busy is probably some kind of record. -- Paul Terry |
#2
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"Paul Terry" wrote in message
... In message , Barry Salter writes On 13 Dec 2004 14:13:54 -0800, wrote: Because I'm that sort of person, this question has been bugging me for a while. Where is London's busiest level crossing in terms of off-peak weekday trains per hour? Where ever in London it is, is it the busiest level crossing in the UK? In Europe? Anywhere? A post on the UK Roads forum suggests Manor Road, Richmond, (adjacent to North Sheen station) as a possibility. If that is so (and I think it likely) then the level crossings at Sheen Lane (adjacent to Mortlake station), White Hart Lane and Vine Road are equal contenders since all four are on the same stretch of line. Having four level crossings in close succession on a line that busy is probably some kind of record. Can I ask a supplementary question? Whereabouts in London (or even in the whole of Britain) is the closest pair of level crossings in terms of the length of road (not railway) between them? I'm talking about separate crossings with separate sets of barriers. I can think of a pair which are very close, but I want to see if you suggest the same ones. |
#3
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"Martin Underwood" wrote
Can I ask a supplementary question? Whereabouts in London (or even in the whole of Britain) is the closest pair of level crossings in terms of the length of road (not railway) between them? I'm talking about separate crossings with separate sets of barriers. I can think of a pair which are very close, but I want to see if you suggest the same ones. To kick this one off Martin. There are two in Crawley about 500 metres apart. I can't imagine that they are the closest though - any better out there? |
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"Henry" wrote in message
... "Martin Underwood" wrote Can I ask a supplementary question? Whereabouts in London (or even in the whole of Britain) is the closest pair of level crossings in terms of the length of road (not railway) between them? I'm talking about separate crossings with separate sets of barriers. I can think of a pair which are very close, but I want to see if you suggest the same ones. To kick this one off Martin. There are two in Crawley about 500 metres apart. I can't imagine that they are the closest though - any better out there? The pair I'm thinking of are much closer than this. I'd estimate about 50 metres. I'll also add a second category: closest pair of level crossings in terms of the length of railway between them. |
#5
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In message , Henry writes
"Martin Underwood" wrote Can I ask a supplementary question? Whereabouts in London (or even in the whole of Britain) is the closest pair of level crossings in terms of the length of road (not railway) between them? I'm talking about separate crossings with separate sets of barriers. I can think of a pair which are very close, but I want to see if you suggest the same ones. To kick this one off Martin. There are two in Crawley about 500 metres apart. I can't imagine that they are the closest though - any better out there? Vine Road, Barnes - there's room for only about 6 cars between the level crossing on the Hounslow loop line and the level crossing on the Windsor line: http://www.multimap.com/map/browse.c...le=5000&icon=x -- Paul Terry |
#6
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"Paul Terry" wrote in message
... In message , Henry writes "Martin Underwood" wrote Can I ask a supplementary question? Whereabouts in London (or even in the whole of Britain) is the closest pair of level crossings in terms of the length of road (not railway) between them? I'm talking about separate crossings with separate sets of barriers. I can think of a pair which are very close, but I want to see if you suggest the same ones. To kick this one off Martin. There are two in Crawley about 500 metres apart. I can't imagine that they are the closest though - any better out there? Vine Road, Barnes - there's room for only about 6 cars between the level crossing on the Hounslow loop line and the level crossing on the Windsor line: http://www.multimap.com/map/browse.c...le=5000&icon=x That's the one I was thinking of - unless anyone can think of a pair of crossings that are even closer than that. |
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"Martin Underwood" wrote in message
... Vine Road, Barnes - there's room for only about 6 cars between the level crossing on the Hounslow loop line and the level crossing on the Windsor line: http://www.multimap.com/map/browse.c...le=5000&icon=x That's the one I was thinking of - unless anyone can think of a pair of crossings that are even closer than that. In Nottingham a road crosses an adjacent railway and tramline. I think that both lines are single track, being a former double track railway, but I might be wrong there. There are barriers around the railway but the tramway is ungated - this is because the tramline is too frequent to have a gated crossing. I don't think there is room for even one car between the tramline and the railway. (This is all hearsay, I have neve been there or seen written confirmation). -- John Rowland - Spamtrapped Transport Plans for the London Area, updated 2001 http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acro...69/tpftla.html A man's vehicle is a symbol of his manhood. That's why my vehicle's the Piccadilly Line - It's the size of a county and it comes every two and a half minutes |
#8
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Paul Terry wrote:
In message , Henry writes "Martin Underwood" wrote Can I ask a supplementary question? Whereabouts in London (or even in the whole of Britain) is the closest pair of level crossings in terms of the length of road (not railway) between them? I'm talking about separate crossings with separate sets of barriers. I can think of a pair which are very close, but I want to see if you suggest the same ones. To kick this one off Martin. There are two in Crawley about 500 metres apart. I can't imagine that they are the closest though - any better out there? Vine Road, Barnes - there's room for only about 6 cars between the level crossing on the Hounslow loop line and the level crossing on the Windsor line: http://www.multimap.com/map/browse.c...le=5000&icon=x Not forgetting the two in Bollo Lane Acton just south of South Acton station. http://streetmap.co.uk/newmap.srf?x=...=newsearch.srf |
#10
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Martin Underwood wrote:
Can I ask a supplementary question? Whereabouts in London (or even in the whole of Britain) is the closest pair of level crossings in terms of the length of road (not railway) between them? I'm talking about separate crossings with separate sets of barriers. I can think of a pair which are very close, but I want to see if you suggest the same ones. Isn't there some near Richmond where the line diverges, or the NLL comes in next to the SWT lines? I see something like that last week when I was on a JOP heading towards Richmond/Reading -- Darren Sudbury Branch Line website: http://www.sudbury-branchline.co.uk http://photos.darrenjohnson.co.uk |
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